samedi, 8 mai 2010

We're going to take our first geocaching trip today! We're new at it, but it looks like it's a lot of fun. I wish they had stuff like this back when I was in scouts. Given how many places we hiked then and where in the world I've been since, I could have a bit of a collection in the log book. But I digress.

Anyway, we found that there are quite a few caches right around us here. In fact, two of them are within a few hundred feet of the house. So, we're going to take the kids down with us on a little walk and see what we can find.

As I was thinking about it a little, I might have even seen one of them and didn't know what I was looking at. I kind of expect to have one of those ah-ha moments at finally knowing what that box is when I see it.

mardi, 12 janvier 2010

Recently, I took the dive into developing in Silverlight 3. I sat down, having only watched one 15 minute crash course video on it, and went to work developing a little version of Boggle. I still have a few things to work out, but the main point is that I could just sit and do it. Why? Because I did it in C#.

Some background: As I was going through school and they taught us Flash, PHP, MySQL, JavaScript, and some other classes, I started thinking that there had to be an easier way. To use Flash you have to know ActionScript 3, to use PHP you have to know PHP, and so on to the point that for each technology you have to know its own language. So, I took a look at the .NET framework, especially after taking one class in Visual Basic. After not too much digging and research, I REALLY started to wonder why they weren't teaching this stuff in school...in Washington right down the street from Redmond, nonetheless! I came to find out that they used to have one ASP.NET C# class, but it was disbanded the year before. Why?!

As much as I loved hacking out 1000's of lines of code over the course of my time in school, I have since learned that I could have done the same in half the time and writing less code by hand if done in .NET. If only I'd known at the time. I think the great icing on the cake to that part of the story came in my final quarter in a Project Management class. This class was the capstone to the 2 year program that I was in,as well as part of a scripting certificate, and by now I was hip to .NET. Anyway, it started with 9 students: 6 PHP developers from our classes together and 3 .NET developers (I was one now and two others were there getting scripting certificates). I found it quite easy to do all of the assignments in .NET with even the little experience that I had in it. When the quarter's project came due there were only three of us there to turn it in, demonstrate it, and take the written final. Guess which three were there.

Anyway, to try and keep this short, with .NET you can learn one language, such as C# as I prefer (or VB), and use it on many things. Such as Silverlight, ASP.NET, WPF, SharePoint, and on and on. You don't have to learn a different programming language for each thing that you want to work with. Is it that hard for some schools to figure that out? Well, I guess when most of the committee members would lose their jobs because they don't know .NET, then that makes sense, but oh well. They just need to learn to be smarter. :-)

mercredi, 6 janvier 2010

A happy birthday to my great wife, Stephanie, today! Unfortunately, she's working all day, but I made her a great, big lunch (which doubles as dinner as well). Little does she know until she reads this, or gets home, that the girls and I creatively made a nice, yummy cake for her. You'll see it later.

mardi, 5 janvier 2010

January 5th, 1914 - Henry Ford introduces the $5/day minimum wage. Ninety-six years later, it costs me at least that much, with tax, to buy a simple meal...anywhere. A fast-food restaurant, the grocer's deli... No matter what the time difference is, though, the value of a dollar is still important and you can't convince me to pay that much for basic food, unless I'm in a hurry, you gave me coupons, and/or you are Taco Bell. Even though that time difference is local here to the U.S., it's not much different than many other countries that have people working for such an equivalency in wages, I.E. $5US/day.

I'm not exactly an economist, nor do I work for the IMF, but I find it amazing how people still survive in their own local economies around the world under such conditions. Yes, I'm even taking into consideration the Digital Divide and imported medical assistance, but still, I might go bonkers. But then, I'm also comparing my life now with said conditions. That would be a bit different.

vendredi, 1 janvier 2010

I've never made New Year Resolutions, per se, where I actually write down a list of things that I want to do, but I guess that I do come up with things that I'd like to achieve and a new year is a good way to help measure those things.

So, perhaps I'll actually blog this year a lot more. Since joining Facebook early in 2009, I just didn't find much to blog about as I would just jot my thoughts, videos and photos, and other things down right onto there. However, there are things that can be split between the two and I'll blog about more things as the result.

dimanche, 28 juin 2009

This is my kind of humor! Have fun playing the games, especially the one when you click on Green Tea. Purposely mess up so that you can catch all of his lines! I think that they’re hilarious. I had Stephanie play it without telling her what to do or what is was about. I think that she got a kick out of it too. :)